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[Part 2] Zoonotic Disease And Animal Welfare In The U.S. by Kristen A. Stilt & Bonnie Nadzam at Faunalytics.org Original post https://faunalytics.org/zoonotic-disease-and-animal-welfare-in-the-u-s/ Related Episodes: BONUS 1: Go Vegan or Risk Another Pandemic 164: How the Loss of Biodiversity and Ecosystems Increases Pandemic Risk 292: World Food Safety Day - Shifting Towards The Food System of Today and Tomorrow 326: Eating our way to Extinction – Film Review 332: [Part 1] Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) - Increasing the Risk of Pandemics 333: [Part 2] Antimicrobial Resistance (AMR) - Increasing the Impact of Pandemics 391: The Connection Between Deadly Pandemics and Our Diets 487: 4 Reasons Why Going Plant Based Promotes Social Justice Faunalytics is a non-profit organization providing animal advocates with data to understand how people think about and respond to advocacy, and the best strategies to inspire change for animals. They empower advocates with access to research, analysis, strategies, and messages that maximize their effectiveness to reduce animal suffering. Their online research library is free and has summaries of over 4,000 peer-reviewed research articles, public opinion surveys, and blog posts offering deep analysis on every animal issue you can think of. It's the world's biggest collection of opinion and behavior research about animal issues, and it's presented with an emphasis on effectiveness, readability, and useability. Sign up for their email alerts and get weekly or monthly updates on the latest research. How to support the podcast: Share with others. Recommend the podcast on your social media. Follow/subscribe to the show wherever you listen. Buy some vegan/plant based merch: https://www.plantbasedbriefing.com/shop Follow Plant Based Briefing on social media: Twitter: @PlantBasedBrief YouTube: YouTube.com/PlantBasedBriefing Facebook: Facebook.com/PlantBasedBriefing LinkedIn: Plant Based Briefing Podcast Instagram: @PlantBasedBriefing #vegan #plantbased #plantbasedbriefing #zoonotic #pandemics #Animalindustries #animalagriculture
[Part 1] Zoonotic Disease And Animal Welfare In The U.S. by Kristen A. Stilt & Bonnie Nadzam at Faunalytics.org Original post https://faunalytics.org/zoonotic-disease-and-animal-welfare-in-the-u-s/ Faunalytics is a non-profit organization providing animal advocates with data to understand how people think about and respond to advocacy, and the best strategies to inspire change for animals. They empower advocates with access to research, analysis, strategies, and messages that maximize their effectiveness to reduce animal suffering. Their online research library is free and has summaries of over 4,000 peer-reviewed research articles, public opinion surveys, and blog posts offering deep analysis on every animal issue you can think of. It's the world's biggest collection of opinion and behavior research about animal issues, and it's presented with an emphasis on effectiveness, readability, and useability. Sign up for their email alerts and get weekly or monthly updates on the latest research. How to support the podcast: Share with others. Recommend the podcast on your social media. Follow/subscribe to the show wherever you listen. Buy some vegan/plant based merch: https://www.plantbasedbriefing.com/shop Follow Plant Based Briefing on social media: Twitter: @PlantBasedBrief YouTube: YouTube.com/PlantBasedBriefing Facebook: Facebook.com/PlantBasedBriefing LinkedIn: Plant Based Briefing Podcast Instagram: @PlantBasedBriefing #vegan #plantbased #plantbasedbriefing #zoonotic #pandemics #Animalindustries #animalagriculture
In tempi di emergenza, viaggiamo attraverso i libri. Perché è il modo con cui Black Coffee vuole starti vicina e perché è la cosa che più ci piace. Oggi la voce della McMusa ci porta in Colorado insieme ai personaggi di Lions, il romanzo di Bonnie Nadzam, e alle splendide musiche di Fust. La sigla è dei Drunken Rollers.
In their book, Love in the Anthropocene, our guest, the environmental philosopher Dale Jamieson, and his co-author Bonnie Nadzam invite us to imagine a not-too-distant-future in which our technologies have continued to transform the face of the planet. In this world, the “sixth extinction” is long underway. Like the cities of today, rivers, lakes, forests, … Continue reading Ep. 10 – Dale Jamieson on love and meaning in the age of humans →
Center for Fiction Executive Director Noreen Tomassi talks to Bonnie Nadzam about her book, LIONS. Nadzam was awarded the Center for Fiction's First Novel Prize for her debut novel, LAMB. She will be teaching an online writing class this summer on creativity.
Dale Jamieson is a Professor of Philosophy and Environmental Studies at NYU, as well as Chair of the Environmental Studies Department. He is also Affiliated Professor of Law at NYU Law, and the Director of the Animal Studies Initiative. In his 2014 book, "Reason in a Dark Time: Why The Struggle Against Climate Change Failed and What it Means for our Future," Jamieson argues that climate change fundamentally challenges the ‘commonsense morality’ that we evolved, and thus requires that we expand our ethical imaginations to deal with this unprecedented problem. Most recently, he co-wrote a book of fictional short stories with Bonnie Nadzam in 2015 called "Love in the Anthropocence."
It's Dominic's birthday and he'll cry if he wants to. Your co-hosts first talk green virtue and anthropocenic temperance and Cymene's childhood close encounter with a tiger. We then (9:02) welcome to the podcast a very distinguished guest, Dale Jamieson, Professor of Environmental Studies and Philosophy at New York University and author of Reason in a Dark Time (Oxford University Press, 2014). We talk at length about his moving collaborative project with novelist Bonnie Nadzam (author of Lamb and Lions) and their recently published collection, Love in the Anthropocene (http://www.orbooks.com/catalog/love-in-the-anthropocene-by-jamieson-and-nadzam/). Dale posits love as the antithesis of narcissism and describes why contact with the real is so much more important than enveloping ourselves in fantasy. We talk hierarchy and class and why the Anthropocene will be better for some than for others. Yet, Dale emphasizes the newness of our present situation and says we should spend more time thinking and trying to understand our problems and less time relying on familiar categories and chasing solutions. Tracking back to Dale's earlier work, we touch on the virtues, our need to recover agency, why we should tax email, and the intergenerational ethics of climate change. Then we turn to his current research on how the Anthropocene has challenged the categories and practices of liberalism, eroding both our traditional agency presupposition and public/private distinctions. The point being that we really don't know how to govern in the Anthropocene—and, maybe we didn't in the Holocene either! But in any case we live in a time in need of a great deal of political experimentation. We close with how surfing brought Dale to Environmental Studies and why philosophy matters in the wake of Hurricane Sandy. Do you think we have too much populism and not enough democracy? Listen on!
Bonnie Nadzam is the author of the critically acclaimed, award-winning novel Lamb, and now she returns with Lions. Set on the high plains of Colorado, a young couple find their love and – and everything they know to be true – threatened by the arrival of an unwelcome stranger. A story of awakening, Lions is […]
Fiction writer Bonnie Nadzam and environmental philosopher, Dale Jamieson, worked together to write Love in the Anthropocene, a collection of five short stories that describe a very near future in which nature as we know it no longer exists.